Publication | Open Access
Production of Superoxide and Activity of Superoxide Dismutase in Rabbit Epididymal Spermatozoa
129
Citations
27
References
1982
Year
Mature rabbit spermatozoa from the cauda epididymidis suspended in potassium Tris phosphate buffer at 24 degrees C produced O2.-, as measured by reduction of acetylated ferricytochrome c, with an intrinsic rate of 0.20 nmol/min per 10(8) cells. This rate increased to 1.80 nmol/min per 10(8) cells in the presence of 10 mM cyanide. These spermatozoa contain 2.8 units per 10(8) cells of superoxide dismutase activity, 95% of which is sensitive, and 5% of which is insensitive, to cyanide inhibition. These activities correspond to the cytosolic Cu-Zn form and the mitochondrial Mn form of the dismutase, respectively. Only the cyanide-sensitive form is released from the sperm on hypo-osmotic treatment or sonication. Hypo-osmotically treated rabbit epididymal spermatozoa produced O2.- with an intrinsic rate of 0.24 nmol/min per 10(8) cells, which increased to 0.58 nmol/min per 10(8) cells in the presence of 10 mM cyanide. Both intact and hypo-osmotically treated cells react with O2.- in a second order reaction as inferred from the hyperbolic dependence on cell concentration of O2.- production rate in both the absence and presence of cyanide. The second order rate constant for this reaction with intact cells, kS, was calculated to be 22.9 X 10(-8) (cells/ml)-1 min-1 in its absence. For hypo-osmotically treated cells, the values of kS were 10.8 X 10(-8) (cells/ml)-1 min-1 and 8.2 X 10(-8) (cells/ml) -1 min-1, respectively. Since hypo-osmotically treated cells have lost much of their plasma membrane, the lower value of kS for the treated cells implies that this membrane is one site of reaction of O2.- with the cells. The increase in kS in the presence of cyanide, which inhibits superoxide dismutase and so increases O2.- production, suggests that the cells become more reactive with O2.- as its production rate increase, as would be expected for the occurrence of radical chain oxidation. This in turn suggests that superoxide dismutase plays a major role in protecting rabbit sperm against damage from lipid peroxidation.
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